i18n-inflector version 2.6.7
(Little Kózka
)
This library contains a backend module for I18n that adds some extra functionality to standard backend. It overwrites the translate method in a way that it will interpolate additional inflection tokens present in translations.
require 'i18n-inflector' I18n.translate( 'to_be', :number => :singular, :tense => :past, :person => 2 ) #=> You were here I18n.translate('welcome', :gender => :female) #=> Dear Lady
You can use I18n Inflector to (relatively easy) create translations for highly inflected languages (like those belonging to Slavic language family). You can also use it in translation services that may operate on sentences instead of exact words.
It is intended to be used in a web projects or other projects where translations are performed by many people, yet there is a need to inflect sentences with some external variables. To achieve similar functionality lambdas can be used but including many Proc objects might be considered unsafe or memory consuming.
See i18n-inflector-rails if you need Rails integration.
I18n Inflector lets you build you own inflection patterns contained in translation entries. The patterns may contain simple conditions and tokens, which combined with parameters passed to I18n.translate
method can produce inflected strings.
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See USAGE for detailed information about the usage.
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See EXAMPLES for examples.
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See whole documentation to browse all documents.
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Inline inflection using patterns in translation data.
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Key-based inflection using individual inflection keys.
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Definable inflection kinds and tokens.
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Easy to use public API for inflection data.
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Configurable using special scope of translation data.
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Lazily evaluated Proc and Method objects as inflection options.
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Complex patterns support; inflection by more than one kind at a time.
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Negative matching, aliases, default tokens, token groups and more…
The I18n Inflector extends the translate method from I18n in a way that it will interpolate additional inflection tokens present in translations. These tokens may appear in patterns which are contained within @{
and }
symbols. Configuration is stored also in translation data, in a scope <locale>.i18n.inflections
, where locale
is a locale subtree.
You can create your own inflection kinds (gender, title, person, time, author, etc.) of tokens to group them in a meaningful, semantical sets. That means you can apply Inflector to do simple inflection by a gender or a person, when some language requires it.
It adds the inflector
object to the default backend so you can use many methods for accessing loaded inflection data at runtime, or to set up global switches that are controlling the engine.
Example configuration which uses translation data:
en: i18n: inflections: gender: f: "female" m: "male" n: "neuter" female: @f male: @m default: n
Example translation data:
en: welcome: "Dear @{f:Lady|m:Sir|n:You|All}!" @same_but_as_key: f: "Lady" m: "Sir" n: "You" @prefix: "Dear " @suffix: "!" @free: "All"
The example above is not compatible with Psych parser, which is used by Rails 3. There are two ways to solve that problem.
First is to change a YAML file and replace any value that has special meaning with a symbol:
en: i18n: inflections: gender: f: "female" m: "male" n: "neuter" female: :@f male: :@m default: :n
Second way is to use other parser by adding to config/boot.rb
:
require 'yaml' YAML::ENGINE.yamler = 'syck'
From version 2.1.0 the Inflector supports so called named patterns, which can be used if there is a need to be strict and/or to use the same token names but assigned to different kinds. Example:
welcome: "Dear @gender{f:Lady|m:Sir|n:You|All}"
From version 2.2.0 the Inflector supports complex patterns, which can be used to inflect some sentence or a word by more than a one kind. That might be very helpful for highly inflected languages. An example pattern:
welcome: "Dear @gender+number{f+s:Lady|f+p:Ladies|m+s:Sir|m+p:Gentlemen|All}"
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git clone git://github.com/siefca/i18n-inflector.git
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gem install i18n-inflector
YAML:
en: i18n: inflections: gender: f: "female" m: "male" n: "neuter" o: "other" default: n welcome: "Dear @{f:Lady|m:Sir|n:You|All}"
Code:
I18n.t('welcome') # => "Dear You" I18n.t('welcome', :gender => :m) # => "Dear Sir" I18n.t('welcome', :gender => :unknown) # => "Dear You" I18n.inflector.options.unknown_defaults = false I18n.t('welcome', :gender => :unknown) # => "Dear All" I18n.t('welcome', :gender => :o) # => "Dear All" I18n.inflector.options.excluded_defaults = true I18n.t('welcome', :gender => :o) # => "Dear You"
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See {I18n::Inflector::API} class documentation for detailed information about the API.
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See {I18n::Backend::Inflector} module documentation for detailed information about the internals.
You can run tests both with
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bundle exec rake test
or justbundle exec rake
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run
bundle exec rake testv4
to test with version 4 of I18n -
run a test file directly, e.g.
ruby -Ilib -Itest test/inflector_test.rb
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bundle exec rake bundler:gemfile
– regenerate theGemfile
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bundle exec rake docs
– render the documentation (output in the subdirectory directorydoc
) -
bundle exec rake gem
– builds package (output in the subdirectorypkg
) -
bundle exec rake test
,bundle exec rake testv4
– performs tests -
bundle exec rake Manifest.txt
– regenerates theManifest.txt
file -
bundle exec rake ChangeLog
– regenerates theChangeLog
file
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Copyright © 2011,2012 by Paweł Wilk.
i18n-inflector is copyrighted software owned by Paweł Wilk ([email protected]). You may redistribute and/or modify this software as long as you comply with either the terms of the LGPL (see {file:docs/LGPL}), or Ruby’s license (see {file:docs/COPYING}).
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS” AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.